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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/28774
Title: Self-Beliefs and Epistemic Justifications
Other Titles: WHAT MAKES OUR SELF-BELIEFS ABOUT OUR PERSONALITY TRAITS EPISTEMICALLY JUSTIFIED?
Authors: Mahhouk, Shahdah
Advisor: Stotts, Megan
Department: Philosophy
Keywords: Self-Beliefs;Epistemic justification;Virtue Reliabilism
Publication Date: 2023
Abstract: I explore the epistemic justification of self-beliefs regarding personality traits within the internalism-externalism debate. Historically, the question of epistemic justification of self-beliefs has been discussed only with respect to our beliefs about our current mental states while the epistemic justification of our self-beliefs about our personality traits was assumed not to be any different from the justification of our beliefs about the external world. However, I use empirical psychology to highlight a few unique characteristics of our self-beliefs about personality traits that make the typical application of internalist or externalist standards less straightforward. These characteristics have to do with the biases and the self-verification that accompany our self-beliefs about our personality traits. I argue that externalism, in general, and virtue reliabilism, in particular, are more suitable to the context of our self-beliefs about our personality traits than other theories of justification. However, I contend that within the virtue reliabilism framework, a self-belief-forming process can become more competent if it generates self-belief from the instances where individuals manifest the trait in question while having the motivation and opportunity to do otherwise. I show how this condition makes the self-belief-forming process more competent and, therefore, makes the produced self-beliefs more epistemically justified.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/28774
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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